Robin and Elon are excited to be offering a workshop on how to utilize the content of the Hoccleve Archive for teaching and research at the July 2018 conference titled “The Making of Thomas Hoccleve” in Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada! A major feature of the...

As the Hoccleve Archive enters its 6th year based at the University of Texas at Austin, we are pleased to announce that we are migrating our site from the Texas Digital Library to UT’s College of Liberal Arts IT Service. This promises to provide an easier...

We are proud to announce the launch of our prototype of the Hoccleve Lexicon (the HOCCLEX). This is a major milestone on our path to a critical edition, and an important moment in the long and tangled history of Hoccleve and the digital humanities. The new lexicon...

GSU’s investment in the Hoccleve Archive has resulted in the first graduate degree involving the project. Sruthi Vuppala, who has worked for the past two years as a Student Innovation Fellow assigned to the Hoccleve Archive, recently defended her MS in computer...

The GSU arm of the Hoccleve Archive recently presented a poster at the SAMLA in Atlanta. The conference theme this year was sustainability, and our poster highlighted the way that the Hoccleve Archive Project sustains a corpus of texts, and functions as a pedagogical...

This fall, the Hoccleve Archive acquired a new batch of contributors at both its home institutions. At the University of Texas, Mark Watts have begun working on transforming a database of references to time in the Regiment of Princes into a digital concordance table,...

This fall, the Hoccleve Archive welcomes six new contributors, one from the University of Texas, and five Student Innovation Fellows from Georgia State University. The new members of the team are: Siva Charan Kondeti (Georgia State University, Computer Science MA...

While Thomas Hoccleve very likely never even considered a trip to Iceland during his life, we feel very fortunate to be able to say that the Hoccleve Archive is going to NCS 2014 in Rekjavik! Robin Wharton and Elon Lang have been accepted into the Digital Chaucer...

This has been a busy summer for the Archive! We are currently working to establish the back-end infrastructure and data hierarchy to store and serve the files associated with the archive (including the ~6000 manuscript collation table scans that were completed this...

Two bits of news. Firstly, the scans of all ~6,000 of the Regiment of Princes Collation Tables have been completed by Emma Whelan at the UT-Austin LAITS Media Development Lab. They are currently stored offline awaiting file name modifications, metadata, and a little...